The Violent Legacy of Africa’s Arbitrary Borders

Even if they haven’t heard the term Scramble for Africa, most people know that something went wrong when the continent was divided into nation states by European colonial powers.

Some economists, however, have taken the time to quantify the destructive nature of Africa’s national borders. Authors Stelios Michalopoulos and Elias Papaioannou have released a new working paper showing how arbitrary border decisions have affected war and civil unrest in Africa, particularly among split ethnic groups and their neighbors. Not surprisingly, the length of a conflict and its casualty rate is 25 percent higher in areas where an ethnicity is divided by a national border as opposed to areas where ethnicities have a united homeland. Examples of divided (and conflicted) groups are the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania, and the Anyi of Ghana and the Ivory Coast. The conflict rate is also higher for people living in areas close to ethnic-partitioned hot-spots.

Here’s the abstract:

We examine the long-run consequences of the scramble for Africa among European powers in the late 19th century and uncover the following empirical regularities. First, using information on the spatial distribution of African ethnicities before colonization, we show that borders were arbitrarily drawn. Apart from the land mass and water area of an ethnicity’s historical homeland, no other geographic, ecological, historical, and ethnic-specific traits predict which ethnic groups have been partitioned by the national border. Second, using data on the location of civil conflicts after independence, we show that partitioned ethnic groups have suffered significantly more warfare; moreover, partitioned ethnicities have experienced more prolonged and more devastating civil wars. Third, we identify sizeable spillovers; civil conflict spreads from the homeland of partitioned ethnicities to nearby ethnic regions. These results are robust to a rich set of controls at a fine level and the inclusion of country fixed effects and ethnic-family fixed effects. The uncovered evidence thus identifies a sizable causal impact of the scramble for Africaon warfare.

Using a 1959 ethnic homeland map from ethnolinguist George Peter Murdock, the authors studied African conflicts from 1970 – 2005 (the “post-independence period”) and found that “civil conflict is concentrated in the historical homeland of partitioned ethnicities.” Colonial powers paid attention only to size and water — everything else that defines a nation state as we know it was disregarded. In short, the arbitrary borders of an entire continent have caused untold bloodshed and misery that could have been avoided. The authors conclude:

The uncovered differences in the probability of civil war between partitioned and non-partitioned groups becomes more dramatic when viewed in light of the fact that these two groups of ethnicities were socially, culturally and economically very similar in the eve of colonization and at the time African independence.

COMMENTS: 14

Seems like they’re saying that splitting up ethnic groups is the cause of conflict whereas I would have expected that including different ethnic groups in one arbitrarily-drawn country would be the causal mechanism. But I suppose that the two go hand-in-hand.

“The arbitrary borders of an entire continent have caused untold bloodshed and misery that could have been avoided.”

Are there borders that aren’t arbitrary? Europe, kind of the home of the nation state, has been hardly immune from ethnic conflict–including up until the present day. The Franco-German border is only stable after millions of deaths over it. Is the cultural fuzziness of the U.S.-Mexican border going to eventually lead to chaos and war?

And do you honestly see many viable nation states in Murdock map? Even if borders came from within the continent more power ethnic groups would have still subjugated less powerful ones.

But why does Africa need viable nation-states? The nation-state is entirely a western idea, and one that (at least in my non-expert opinion) has only become common in the last few centuries. Two of Europe’s major countries, Germany and Italy, only became united entities in the 1800s. Other once-viable nation-states like the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia broke up into smaller entities as the result of ethnic divisions. Why should Africa’s arbitrary borders be any more fixed than Europe’s?

Indeed, we can find similar divisions in the US, as a legacy of mapmakers’ desire to draw straight lines rather than follow natural boundaries. For instance, Las Vegas is separated from the rest of Nevada geographically by several hundred miles of desert, and culturally by several light years, while the small part of California east of the Sierra crest has stronger economic & cultural links to Northern Nevada than to the rest of California.

The introduction of modern technology for travel, communications, and warfare means that traditional tribal states are likely to be less viable than modern states (nation-states and empires). Pre-European African political order grew out of pre-European African technology. Rifles, jeeps, and radio communications change things.

Someone wisely (?) said that virtually every war on earth is due to the arbitrary drawing of a line in the sand by the British.

Consider that Israel felt forced to expand to “natural boundaries,” since neither side could be expected to respect a line of longitude, etc.

Every country and tribe DESERVES, I believe, to have borders that are guarded in some way by the natural boundaries of mountains, rivers, oceans, etc….and every sort people deserve to live TOGETHER, rather than being parted by imaginary lines and forced to live with people with whom they have trouble living.

So ethnic diversity in Africa caused chaos and war? I wonder if there are wider implications for ethnic diversity elsewhere?

I’m reminded of an article by Jerry Z Muller for Foreign Affairs where he argues that the peace and stability of modern Europe came about largely because the big population shifts and redrawing of borders after World War II made most European countries highly ethnically homogenous. With few dissatisfied minorities the countries could coexist in peace.

I don’t know if that is true or not, but it seems to be similar to this study in Africa. I’m puzzled because often the people I see blaming European colonial powers for carving Africa up into artificial multiethnic states are pro-immigration and think the same ethnic diversity in Europe will turn out fine! So is ethnic diversity and ethnic partitioning inherently destabilising? I can’t imagine so, since multiethnic New World countries like US, Canada, Australia, etc seem pretty stable. So I am left unsure. Is ethnic diversity going to cause problems outside Africa too or not?

One thing is multi ethniticity caused by immigration and another one is when it’s caused by forced border-making. Immigration is a relatively slow process compared to what happened in Africa in the late 1800s. That was brutal, unnatural. So, multiethnic countries like US, Canada, Australia are stable; yes. But they did not suffered any kind of foreing intervention in the border-making as Africa did. So, one thing is to recieve and control immigrants through the years and another one is being forced, by countries that nothing know about African history or culture, to live together with groups that have been in conflict for centuries. Taking 50-100 different ethno-linguistic groups and push coercing them into living together is extremely different from immigration.

I think political scientists are terrified that as soon as you indicate that national borders are up for renegotiation, many parts of the world, particularly in Africa, would erupt in a tsunami of bloodshed as people tried to get their favoured borders accepted. I.e. the feeling is that however bad things are now (which isn’t all that bad – much better than a few decades ago) trying to ‘put it right’ would be very much worse.

(Warning: I am not a political scientist, politician or historian, so my analysis is not well educated.)